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The White House confirmed and defended conducting a second strike against alleged drug smugglers in the Caribbean in September, amid the Trump administration’s crusade targeting the influx of drugs into the U.S. 

The White House’s statement comes after the Washington Post reported Friday that Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth verbally ordered that a Sept. 2 attack kill everyone on board the alleged drug boat, drawing scrutiny from lawmakers who are requesting additional oversight into the strikes. The Post reported that a second strike was conducted to take out the remaining survivors on the boat. 

Although the Pentagon pushed back against the report, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt did not deny that a second strike occurred and told reporters Monday that the strike Sept. 2 was conducted ‘in self-defense’ in international waters ‘in accordance with the law of armed conflict.’ 

The White House said Monday that Hegseth authorized the second strike, but the head of U.S. Special Operations Command, Adm. Frank ‘Mitch’ Bradley, ordered and directed it. At the time of the strike, Bradley was serving as the commander of Joint Special Operations Command, which falls under U.S. Special Operations Command. 

‘On September 2nd, Secretary Hegseth authorized Admiral Bradley to conduct these kinetic strikes,’ Leavitt said. ‘Admiral Bradley worked well within his authority and the law, directing the engagement to ensure the boat was destroyed and the threat to the United States of America was eliminated.’

When asked to confirm that Bradley was the one who ordered the second strike, Leavitt said that he was ‘well within his authority to do so,’ but declined to disclose whether the second strike was ordered because there were survivors remaining from the first strike. 

Leavitt also disputed that Hegseth ever gave an initial order to ensure that everyone on board was killed, when asked specifically about Hegseth’s instructions. 

‘I would reject that the secretary of War ever said that,’ Leavitt said. ‘However, the president has made it quite clear that if narco-terrorists, again, are trafficking illegal drugs toward the United States, he has the authority to kill them.’

The White House’s statements on the matter don’t completely align with the Pentagon’s. On Friday, the Pentagon denied the Post’s reporting in its entirety. 

‘We told the Washington Post that this entire narrative was false yesterday,’ Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell said in a post on social media Friday. ‘These people just fabricate anonymously sourced stories out of whole cloth. Fake News is the enemy of the people.’ 

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

Meanwhile, the report has prompted lawmakers on both sides of the aisle to ask additional questions about the operations, and press for additional oversight. 

‘This committee is committed to providing rigorous oversight of the Department of Defense’s military operations in the Caribbean,’ Reps. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., and Adam Smith, D-Wash., who lead the House Armed Services Committee, said in a statement on Saturday. ‘We take seriously the reports of follow-on strikes on boats alleged to be ferrying narcotics in the SOUTHCOM region and are taking bipartisan action to gather a full accounting of the operation in question.’

Spokespeople for the committee did not respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital regarding the nature of these additional oversight efforts. 

Additionally, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., said Monday that she is calling for an investigation into the matter as well, and said that Hegseth ‘owes answers to the American people immediately.’

The Trump administration has carried out more than 20 strikes against alleged drug boats in Latin American waters, and has bolstered its military presence in the Caribbean to align with Trump’s goal to crack down on the influx of drugs into the U.S.

The White House also confirmed Monday that Trump is slated to hold a meeting on Monday evening to discuss future actions concerning Venezuela. 

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After one of the most dramatic exits in recent college football memory saw Lane Kiffin leaving Mississippi for LSU — one of the most dramatic athletic departments in the country — both sides will look to settle the noise with an introductory press conference Dec. 1.

Quieting the outside noise won’t be easy. The Kiffin-Mississippi divorce was messy and held the college football world’s attention for weeks. The dust had hardly settled from LSU’s firing of Brian Kelly before the rumor mill around Kiffin started to churn again, and the Rebels’ 2025 season suddenly became a backdrop for the Kiffin sideshow. It culminated Sunday, Nov. 30, when Kiffin officially departed Mississippi to take the LSU coaching job, with his reported ultimatums and threats to finish out the season going unheeded.

Now, Kiffin enters Baton Rouge as one of the most reviled figures by one fanbase since… Lane Kiffin. When he left the Tennessee Vols to take the job at USC in 2010. The college football world has changed a lot since then, of course, and Kiffin will enter a recruiting hotbed in Louisiana. With all of that in mind, he’s hoping this stint goes better than it did with the Trojans, where he was fired in 2013 before rehabbing his coaching reputation as a coordinator at Alabama and a head coach at FAU and Mississippi.

Here are the highlights from Kiffin’s introductory press conference at LSU.

Lane Kiffin press conference live updates

This section will be updated.

Lane Kiffin concludes press conference photo

Kiffin’s press conference concludes with press taking photos of him, president Wade Rousse and athletic director Verge Ausberry.

Lane Kiffin says he talked to Ed Orgeron

Kiffin says he talked to former LSU coach Ed Orgeron after arriving in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Kiffin says Orgeron told him LSU is the best job in America, and Kiffin also gave an Orgeron-esque ‘Go Tigers’ to the crowd in attendance.

Lane Kiffin says he doesn’t know his contract at LSU

Kiffin says he made his decision to be at LSU not because of money. He notes he’s unsure of the details of his new contract, although he jokes it’s likely a great deal.

Kiffin also says he’s more focused on how players can be compensated at LSU.

Lane Kiffin says Frank Wilson will remain interim coach

Frank Wilson will remain LSU’s interim coach in the Tigers’ bowl game, Kiffin confirms.

Lane Kiffin shares advice from Pete Carroll, Nick Saban

Kiffin says Pete Carroll, one of his mentors and the current Las Vegas Raiders head coach, said Kiffin’s dad, Monte Kiffin, would tell Kiffin to take the job.

Kiffin then jokes about former Alabama coach Nick Saban, saying he can’t quite share what Saban told him due to his affiliation with ‘another place in this conference.’

Lane Kiffin says his family had four options

Kiffin says his family basically had to think about four different places on where he’d coach in 2026. The former Mississippi coach also saw substantial interest from Florida.

Lane Kiffin says leaving Mississippi was ‘extremely difficult’

Kiffin says the last six years at Mississippi were the best six years of his life and said leaving the program was ‘extremely difficult.’

‘We tried every single thing possible to continue to coach the team through the playoffs,’ he said. ‘In the end, that was their decision, and we totally respect that.’

Verge Ausberry says Kiffin fits LSU culture

LSU athletic director Verge Ausberry says it was clear from the beginning that Kiffin was the man for LSU’s coaching vacancy.

“As a former player, and an administrator for 30 years, we knew we had to get someone who knew our culture,’ Ausberry said. ‘We knew that was Lane Kiffin.’

Verge Ausberry takes the stage

LSU president Wade Rousse gives a few remarks before introducing LSU athletic director Verge Ausberry, who hired Kiffin, to the lectern.

Kiffin will speak after Ausberry.

Lane Kiffin press conference livestream

Here’s the livestream of Kiffin’s introductory press conference at LSU:

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • A tense handshake line moment occurred between Tennessee’s Janiah Barker and her former UCLA coach, Cori Close.
  • Barker, who transferred from UCLA, seemed to pull away from an attempted embrace by Close after the game.
  • Both Barker and Close made public statements wishing each other well after the incident.

The handshake line following UCLA’s win over Tennessee women’s basketball on Sunday appeared to get tense after Lady Volunteers forward Janiah Barker rebuffed her former UCLA head coach Cori Close.

Barker was one of six UCLA players to enter the transfer portal after the Bruins reached the Final Four for the first time in program history in the 2025 NCAA Tournament last season. Barker transferred to Tennessee for her senior year after spending one season at UCLA under Close, but Sunday’s reunion seemed less than warm.

Following UCLA’s 99-77 win over Tennessee on Sunday, where Barker dropped a season-high 25 points against her former team, Barker and Close briefly shook hands before Barker pulled away from Close’s attempted embrace. Close shrugged her shoulders in response as she continued down the handshake line.

After the incident, Barker took to social media to clear the air, writing, ‘Respect! We shook hands. I wish nothing but the best for Coach (Cori) and my UCLA fam.’

Close was nothing but complimentary of Barker in her postgame press conference, saying, ‘I want to wish Janiah Barker nothing but the best. I think she is a spectacular player, she gave us a lot on the court, off the court. And I just want to make sure that I say I wish her nothing but the best the rest of the way through.’

Close said Barker was presented her UCLA Final Four ring ahead of the game, in addition to a handwritten note.

‘I actually wrote her a card today… I just said, one of the things I’m always going to appreciate about you is how hard you always worked on your game,’ Close said. ‘And to see her shoot the ball the way she did today, this is the best shooting, three-point shooting night maybe she’s had of her career and she works at that.’

Barker said returning to Pauley Pavilion was ’emotional,’ but said her mindset was to ‘focus on the game’ and ‘not let my emotions go too high or too low.’

‘It was definitely an emotional game,’ Barker said. ‘My mindset was just truly just focus on the game. I know there’s a lot of other things that can play into it, but my thing was just keep the main thing, the main thing… Don’t take it too personal. I don’t even take it personal at all. It’s just basketball.’

Barker shot 9-of-17 from the field and 3-of-7 from the field in Sunday’s loss and rounded out her stat line with three rebounds, two steals and four turnovers in 27 minutes. However, ‘If I’m being honest, I don’t care how many points I scored. I’m upset that we lost. I wish that we would have came out here and won,’ Barker added.

Barker spent the first two seasons of her collegiate career at Texas A&M, where she averaged 12.4 points, 6.9 rebounds and 1.2 steals in 49 games (34 starts). She transferred to UCLA for her junior year and averaged 7.4 points, 6.0 rebounds and 1.4 assists in 36 games (three starts) last season.

Barker applauded Tennessee coach Kim Caldwell for ‘just really letting me be myself.’

‘She’s letting me do everything that I wanted to do in college and I’m so thankful for that,’ Barker said postgame. ‘She also has me in a role of being a leader… I’ve been to a Final Four before, so I know what it looks like to win and it’s put me in a position to lead this team. I feel like I didn’t do that well today. It’s a lot of things that I’m learning as well in this role, so I’m giving myself grace.’

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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The NBA schedule is marching on as the NBA Cup knockout rounds are set to kick off later this month.

Three of the Top 5 teams by standing in each of the Eastern and Western Conferences are in the NBA Cup quarterfinals, but there is one team that has dominated and stands well beyond all other squads. The Oklahoma City Thunder have been dominating opponents so thoroughly that many of their stars, namely Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, aren’t even playing fourth quarters.

Everyone is chasing the defending champs, who may be poised for a dominant season.

Here are USA TODAY Sports’ NBA power rankings after Week 6 of the 2025-26 regular season:

USA TODAY Sports NBA power rankings

Note: Records and stats through Nov. 30. Parentheses show movement from last week’s rankings

NBA Week 6 power rankings: Top 5

1. Oklahoma City Thunder, 20-1 (—)

2. Los Angeles Lakers, 15-4 (+2)

3. Detroit Pistons, 16-4 (-1)

4. Houston Rockets, 13-4 (+1)

5. Denver Nuggets, 14-5 (-2)

Oklahoma City just got Jalen Williams (wrist) back, and the Thunder are the most complete team in the NBA, and one that may put forth the most prolific season in league history. The Lakers have won seven consecutive, but their competition since LeBron James returned has a combined winning percentage of .260. And the Nuggets (123.9) and Rockets (122.3) are battling for top offenses in the NBA.

NBA Week 6 power rankings: Nos. 6-10

6. New York Knicks, 13-6 (+7)

7. San Antonio Spurs, 13-6 (+1)

8. Miami Heat, 13-7 (+2)

9. Minnesota Timberwolves, 12-8 (-2)

10. Toronto Raptors, 14-7 (-1)

On a four-game winning streak, the Knicks have found their rhythm on offense, being deliberate in the half-court, but ranking third in offensive rating (120.5). San Antonio continues to shine, even in the absence of Victor Wembanyama (calf) and Stephon Castle (hip), including a key NBA Cup victory Friday, Nov. 28, over the Nuggets. And the Raptors are on a two-game losing streak, but have been one of the surprises in the NBA and lead the league in assist-to-turnover ratio (2.08).

NBA Week 6 power rankings: Nos. 11-15

11. Atlanta Hawks, 13-8 (+1)

12. Phoenix Suns, 12-9 (-1)

13. Cleveland Cavaliers, 12-9 (-7)

14. Orlando Magic, 12-8 (—)

15. Boston Celtics, 11-9 (+1)

The Suns continue to outperform, and Dillon Brooks’ offensive game — he’s averaging career-bests points per game (21.7) and shooting percentage (45.1%) — is a key reason why. The Cavaliers have lost three in a row and Cleveland’s offensive rating (115.7; 14th) is 5.3 points off of last year’s league-leading mark. Orlando, without Paolo Banchero (groin) have steadied their play as Desmond Bane’s usage has increased.

NBA Week 6 power rankings: Nos. 16-20

16. Philadelphia 76ers, 10-9 (+1)

17. Golden State Warriors, 11-10 (-2)

18. Memphis Grizzlies, 9-12 (+3)

19. Milwaukee Bucks, 9-12 (-1)

20. Chicago Bulls, 9-10 (-1)

Whereas the Bucks have floundered without Giannis Antetokounmpo (going 2-8 over their last 10), the Grizzlies have been steady without Ja Morant (winners of three consecutive). Nikola Vučević’s frustration with his young teammates shows the Bulls might be headed toward an inevitable rebuild, and the Warriors are also facing tension and drama, with Stephen Curry (quad) sidelined.

NBA Week 6 power rankings: Nos. 21-25

21. Portland Trail Blazers, 8-12 (-1)

22. Dallas Mavericks, 6-15 (+1)

23. Charlotte Hornets, 6-14 (+2)

24. Utah Jazz, 6-13 (—)

25. Indiana Pacers, 4-16 (+3)

The early-season success has faded for the Trail Blazers, whose pace has slowed significantly. The Mavericks are starting to find a rhythm as Cooper Flagg became the youngest player in NBA history to score 35 points, breaking the mark previously held by LeBron James. And the Pacers are finally starting to get (a little) healthier.

NBA Week 6 power rankings: Nos. 26-30

26. Los Angeles Clippers, 5-15 (-4)

27. Sacramento Kings, 5-16 (-1)

28. New Orleans Pelicans, 3-18 (+1)

29. Brooklyn Nets, 3-16 (-2)

30. Washington Wizards, 2-16 (—)

It’s time to wonder whether Tyronn Lue’s job is in trouble and if the Clippers are about to embark on a full rebuild. The Kings posted solid consecutive victories against the Timberwolves and Nuggets, but have since lost three in a row. And the Wizards beat the Hawks in a 46-point gem from CJ McCollum, but they continue to hold the NBA’s worst net rating (-12.2).

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Pro Football Hall of Famer Marshall Faulk has been named the new head coach at Southern University.
  • Faulk has one year of college coaching experience, serving as the running backs coach at Colorado under Deion Sanders.
  • Southern alumni Aeneas Williams and Avery Johnson were instrumental in recruiting Faulk for the position.

Pro Football Hall of Famer Marshall Faulk introduced himself as the new head coach at Southern University by saying he found his calling as coach despite his lack of experience in the profession and was “sold” to take the job by two prominent Southern alumni — Pro Football Hall of Famer Aeneas Williams and former NBA player Avery Johnson.

Faulk talked about it Monday Dec. 1 at his introductory news conference in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Faulk, 52, has only one year of coaching experience in college football after spending the past season as running backs coach at Colorado under head coach Deion Sanders.

“I could have stayed at Colorado. I was comfortable,” Faulk said. “But I’ve never done well in life when comfortable. Like, I’m the kind of person who needs to be a little uncomfortable. And I’m not gonna lie to you. This is uncomfortable. and I like it.”

Aeneas Williams and Avery Johnson ‘sold’ Southern to Faulk

Before coaching at Colorado, Faulk worked in financial services and as an analyst for the NFL Network. He is from New Orleans and played high school football there before playing college football at San Diego State.

Asked about his lack of experience, Faulk downplayed it. He is the latest in a trend of NFL legends with little or no coaching experience to take over at a Historically Black College or University (HBCU), including Deion Sanders (Jackson State), Eddie George (Tennessee State), DeSean Jackson (Delta State) and Michael Vick (Norfolk State).

“What’s there to question?” Faulk said when asked about his lack of experience. “You know and I know this is my first head coaching job. I don’t think there’s a question. You can’t give answers to anything like that. You know, it’s like anything else. Just wait and see. Like, time will tell. You’ll get to decide whether what they’re saying or what I’m doing works.”

Williams and Johnson “sold” Southern to him, Faulk said. He said they’re “like brothers to me.” Williams was a teammate of Faulk’s with the St. Louis Rams.

“This is indeed a pivotal moment for Southern University football,” said Johnson, who also was an NBA coach. To demonstrate how big of moment it was, Johnson added that “I’ve never flown here for a football press conference.”

Marshall Faulk said he’s decided on 90% of his coaching staff

Faulk said 90% of his coaching staff is in place but declined to reveal names until the hirings were made official. Some coaches from Colorado could join him after the Buffaloes finished the season with a 3-9 record.

Faulk takes over a Southern team that finished 2-10 in 2025 but won the Bayou Classic against Grambling State on Saturday in New Orleans, 28-27.

Southern athletic director Roman Banks said he wanted a “game-changer” to help Southern compete in this new age of college sports, when players are paid for their name, image and likeness. Faulk’s fame already has drawn more attention to Southern. Banks said the hire recently led to “phone calls that we’ve never been able to get to upgrade” facilities.

Looking forward to the 2026 season Faulk just had a special request for Southern supporters. He said he hopes they stay after the halftime show featuring Southern’s famed band.

“I hope that you guys like football in the second half as much as well as you do in the first half,” Faulk said. “Although I love the band, there will be football played in the third and fourth quarters.”

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

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  • Pittsburgh Steelers fans chanted for coach Mike Tomlin to be fired during a recent home loss to the Buffalo Bills.
  • Tomlin, who has never had a losing season in his tenure, acknowledged his and the team’s frustration with their performance.
  • Quarterback Aaron Rodgers defended Tomlin, stating players need to take accountability for the team’s struggles.

PITTSBURGH – It would have been so much like Mike Tomlin to rip off some clip-and-save catchphrase in response to the instant feedback that got so personal as his Pittsburgh Steelers were embarrassed on Sunday in yet another debacle under his watch.

This had to sting. The Steelers couldn’t stop Buffalo, couldn’t score and took the fun out of waving those Terrible Towels. Not even the traditional Renegade serenade helped. They also booed that. The mood has become so sour, which is what happens when a team plummets from a promising 4-1 to half-empty 6-6 in a little more than a month.

If there was ever a time for a pointed one-liner from Tomlin to put it in some hopeful perspective, this was it. You know the messages.

The standard is the standard.

We don’t live in our fears.

Excuses are the tools of the incompetent.

Tomlin certainly heard the catcalls. Yet during a game in which his offense was shut out in the second half and his defense was gashed for 249 rushing yards – most ever by a Steelers opponent at Acrisure Stadium/Heinz Field – what Tomlin saw was much worse than what he heard.

No, there was no inspirational quote to counter that.

Fire Mike Tomlin? After 18 winning seasons, coach doesn’t deserve this

When someone asked Tomlin whether he had a sense of how restless and frustrated the crowd was, he said: “I know how restless and frustrated I was, so I assume they were in the same state we were in.”

What went through his mind when the crowd is chanting to fire you?

“Man, I share their frustration tonight,” Tomlin responded. “We didn’t do enough. That’s just the reality of it.”

Tomlin, who has never had a losing season during his nearly 19-year run as Steelers coach, doesn’t deserve this. That’s not to suggest the fans can’t scream for changes. He knows. That comes with the territory of his high-profile, high-powered job. There are no untouchables. Ask Bill Belichick. Coaches are hired to be fired.

Yet Aaron Rodgers, who followed Tomlin at the podium on Sunday night, maintained that his coach doesn’t deserve all the heat because the players share in the accountability realm.

Sure, Rodgers heard the negative noise coming from the fans.

“That’s part of it,” Rodgers said. “They pay money for a ticket. So, they have a right – good, bad, indifferent – to say what they want. I totally understand the frustration. I’ve been booed on offense, even at Green Bay over the years.

“That was a boo-worthy performance, and I understand the frustration.”

Still, Rodgers echoed linebacker T.J. Watt in considering how flat the Steelers were for such a big game. He pointed to a lack of energy on the practice field last week, although he stopped short of concluding that it carried into Sunday’s game.

Regardless, it’s reasonable to expect the tone to be set by the head coach, and in this case Tomlin. When asked, Rodgers pushed back on that theme.

This response came wrapped with its own dramatic vibe. Rodgers hesitated before he answered, grabbing a bottle of water and twisting the cap as he apparently settled on his words.

“I know what you’re trying to ask, and I’m not going down that road at all,” Rodgers said. “I believe in the coaching staff. I believe in Mike Tomlin. That’s why I came here.”

Then Rodgers, nobly, shared the responsibility.

“Players need to take accountability, myself included, and I will,” he said. “I will continue to. I’ve got to play better. But there’s 11 starters on offense, 11 on defense, plus (more) with the personnel groupings that we run.”

‘Keep watching’? On field product must improve for Steelers faithful to believe

Later in the session, someone asked Rodgers about players not holding themselves accountable, which prompted an instant correction.

“I didn’t say that,” Rodgers shot back. “I said we need to hold ourselves accountable.”

Indeed, that’s what he said.

Still, in the context of the here-and-now, there’s enough accountability for all involved.

For the fans calling for Tomlin’s job, hold that thought. The Steelers have had just three coaches since 1969, with Tomlin following Bill Cowher, who followed Chuck Noll. And the philosophy of Steelers owner Art Rooney II is hardly driven by knee-jerk reaction.

No, the fact that Tomlin hasn’t won a playoff game since 2016 is not a good look. Yet the immediate matter involves trying to claim the AFC North crown that once seemed firmly in Pittsburgh’s grasp, with much to be determined by the showdown at the Baltimore Ravens on Dec. 7.

Instant feedback is one thing. Yet there’s still a season to finish for Tomlin, Rodgers and the rest of the Steelers.

Tomlin had a succinct response when maintaining that the people are already in place for the Steelers to turn around their drab performances of late to make a legitimate run.

What makes him so confident of that?

“Keep watching,” he said.

Rather than a catchphrase from Tomlin, it sounded like truth or dare because what the Steelers have given their faithful to watch lately is clearly part of the problem.

Contact Jarrett Bell at jbell@usatoday.com or follow on  X: @JarrettBell

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The U.S. House of Representatives is scheduled to vote Monday, Dec. 1 on a bipartisan bill to allow the NCAA, and potentially the newly formed College Sports Commission, to create and enforce national rules that have come under legal dispute in recent years.

The SCORE Act (Student Compensation And Opportunity Through Rights and Endorsements) intends to provide more regulation and calm the chaotic environment created by the introduction of name, image and likeness (NIL) compensation, revenue sharing and the transfer portal to college sports. The proposed bill, which was introduced in July with backing from leaders of three House committees, would permit the NCAA to set a cap on how much schools can spend on NIL deals and parameters for the manner in which athletes transfer, so long as they can transfer at least once and be immediately eligible.

Other aspects of the proposed bill would put into law the fair-market-value assessment of athletes’ NIL deals with entities other than schools provided under the House vs. NCAA settlement and allow universities to prevent athletes from having NIL deals that conflict with school sponsorship deals. The bill also notably shields the NCAA, the Commission, conferences and schools from antitrust and state-court lawsuits that could come from rules.

The NCAA has lobbied for Congressional antitrust provisions throughout the past decade as its regulations over athlete compensation and transfer eligibility were challenged and eventually changed by state legislatures and lawsuits.

‘It is long past time that we take action to ensure that we have sustainable future for college sports, especially for women’s sports and the Olympic sports,’ said Rep. Gus Bilirakis (R-Fla.), the chairman of the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee, when he led a markup of the SCORE Act in July. ‘That creates predictability and certainty for all student-athletes. We must act now to protect and preserve the uniquely American institution of college sports we have all come to know and love.”

The bill would still need to work its way through the Senate if it passes in the House, but could lead to bipartisan discussions even if it is voted down by the Senate.

U.S. Sens. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.), Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) introduced the Student Athlete Fairness and Enforcement (SAFE) Act in September, aiming ‘to codify athletes’ rights and protections in law, expand revenue for all schools, support women’s and Olympic sports and bring much-needed stability to the college sports system.’

The key provisions in the bill provide federal NIL protections, pooling of media rights, new broadcast revenue for Olympic and women’s sports, local market broadcast access for football and basketball, protections from bad actor agents, national standards for the transfer portal and preserves the House vs. NCAA settlement’s revenue share cap.

Monday’s House vote will occur hours after Rep. Lori Trahan (D-Mass.), a former Division-I volleyball player, also announced plans to introduce a competing bill modeled after the Senate proposal with federal standards for NIL rights and the pooling of media rights, in addition to the creation of a bipartisan Commission to Stabilize College Sports with a two-year timeline to develop recommendations for an enduring governance model. 

‘Despite years of intense lobbying from the most powerful institutions in college athletics, Congress is increasingly divided on how to address the challenges threatening the industry,’ Trahan said in a news release. ‘Too many proposals pushed by entrenched power brokers focus on regaining control at the expense of the athletes who drive college sports, rather than on creating a sustainable system, particularly for women’s and Olympic sports and smaller schools.’

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A week of holiday hoops tournaments produced some changes in the USA TODAY Sports men’s basketball coaches poll. The No. 1 team didn’t change, but three other squads are getting first-place support.

Purdue remains on top, as it has been since the preseason. The Boilermakers picked up 21 of 31 firsts this week, but they have company from another Big Ten contender. Michigan vaults from sixth all the way to No. 2 after their successful stint in Las Vegas. The Wolverines were voted first by six panelists. No. 3 Arizona hangs on to three No. 1 nods, with the final first-place vote going to No. 4 Duke. Connecticut rounds out the top five, edging unbeaten Louisville by eight poll points.

Houston drops from the second spot to No. 7 after taking its first loss of the season. No. 8 Michigan State and No. 9 Iowa State each move up four positions, and Brigham Young climbs a notch to No. 10 after swapping places with Gonzaga.

Defending champion Florida tumbles six places to No. 14, staying ahead of Illinois by a single point. Vanderbilt makes the biggest move within the poll, vaulting seven spots to No. 16 thanks to a 7-0 start.

Kansas is back in the rankings at No. 21, and Iowa nudges in at No. 25. UCLA and North Carolina State are the week’s dropouts.

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The House unanimously passed a bill on Monday barring anyone linked to Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel from moving to the United States.

It’s a rare moment of bipartisanship on the topic of Israel, an issue that’s otherwise exacerbated deep fractures within both parties in the House of Representatives — particularly for Democrats.

The Republican-led legislation is called the ‘No Immigration Benefits for Hamas Terrorists Act of 2025’ and was introduced by Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif.

It passed the House by voice vote on Monday afternoon, meaning it advanced with unanimous approval without lawmakers taking individual votes on the bill.

‘There are still some things we can come together on in this body, and one of them is opposition to Hamas and the terrorism they unleashed on civilians in Israel more than two years ago,’ McClintock told Fox News Digital.

‘What this does is place them in the same category as Nazi collaborators in the Holocaust, which are also referenced in the Immigration Nationality Act.’

The bill now heads to the U.S. Senate, where a parallel effort was introduced earlier this year by Sens. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., and Jacky Rosen, D-Nev.

McClintock told Fox News Digital he was hopeful the Senate would take up the bill — while noting it passed the House last term as well without the upper chamber taking action.

‘The repeated actions of the House in passing this bill, I think, will hopefully inspire the Senate to take it up this year and send it to the president,’ he said. ‘It’s important for two reasons. Number one, to prevent a future Joe Biden from admitting such people, and to empower a future Donald Trump presidency to keep them out.’

The legislation would amend existing U.S. immigration law to deem ‘any alien who carried out, participated in, planned, financed, afforded material support to, or otherwise facilitated any of the attacks against Israel initiated by Hamas beginning on October 7, 2023’ inadmissible to the country.

It would also add Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad to the list of terror groups whose members and supporters are barred from the U.S. under the Immigration and Nationality Act.

It comes after a Gazan native, Mahmoud Amin Ya’qub Al-Muhtadi, who was residing in Louisiana, was arrested earlier this year over his alleged involvement in the Oct. 7 attack.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

PARIS — Airbus fleets were returning toward normal operations on Monday after the European plane maker pushed through abrupt software changes faster than expected, as it wrestled with safety headlines long focused on rival Boeing.

Dozens of airlines from Asia to the United States said they had carried out a snap software retrofit ordered by Airbus, and mandated by global regulators, after a vulnerability to solar flares emerged in a recent mid-air incident on a JetBlue A320.

Airbus said on Monday that the vast majority of around 6,000 of its A320-family fleet affected by the safety alert had been modified, with fewer than 100 jets still requiring work.

JetBlue Aircraft At LaGuardia Airport
JetBlue Airbus A320 planes at LaGuardia Airport in New York City.Nicolas Economou / NurPhoto via Getty Images file

But some require a longer process and Colombia’s Avianca continued to halt bookings for dates until December 8.

Sources familiar with the matter said the unprecedented decision to recall about half the A320-family fleet was taken shortly after the possible but unproven link to a drop in altitude on the JetBlue jet emerged late last week.

Shares in Airbus were down 2.1% in early trading in Paris.

Following talks with regulators, Airbus issued its 8-page alert to hundreds of operators on Friday, effectively ordering a temporary grounding by ordering the repair before next flight.

“The thing hit us about 9 p.m. [Jeddah time] and I was back in here about 9:30. I was actually quite surprised how quickly we got through it: there are always complexities,” said Steven Greenway, CEO of Saudi budget carrier Flyadeal.

The instruction was seen as the broadest emergency recall in the company’s history and raised immediate concerns of travel disruption particularly during the busy U.S. Thanksgiving weekend.

The sweeping warning exposed the fact that Airbus does not have full real-time awareness of which software version is used given reporting lags, industry sources said.

At first airlines struggled to gauge the impact since the blanket alert lacked affected jets’ serial numbers. A Finnair passenger said a flight was delayed on the tarmac for checks.

Over 24 hours, engineers zeroed in on individual jets.

Several airlines revised down estimates of the number of jets impacted and time needed for the work, which Airbus initially pegged at three hours per plane.

“It has come down a lot,” an industry source said on Sunday, referring to the overall number of aircraft affected.

The fix involved reverting to an earlier version of software that handles the nose angle. It involves uploading the previous version via a cable from a device called a data loader, which is carried into the cockpit to prevent cyberattacks.

At least one major airline faced delays because it lacked enough data loaders to handle dozens of jets in such a short time, according to an executive speaking privately.

UK’s easyJet and Wizz Air said on Monday they had completed the updates over the weekend without cancelling any flights.

JetBlue said late Sunday it expected to have completed work to return to service 137 of 150 impacted aircraft by Monday and plans to cancel approximately 20 flights for Monday due to the issue.

Questions remain over a subset of generally older A320-family jets that will need a new computer rather than a mere software reset. The number of those involved has been reduced below initial estimates of 1,000, industry sources said.

Industry executives said the weekend furor highlighted changes in the industry’s playbook since the Boeing 737 MAX crisis, in which the U.S. plane maker was heavily criticized over its handling of fatal crashes blamed on a software design error.

It is the first time Airbus has had to deal with global safety attention on such a scale since that crisis. CEO Guillaume Faury publicly apologized in a deliberate shift of tone for an industry beset by lawsuits and conservative public relations. Boeing has also declared itself more open.

“Is Airbus acting with the Boeing MAX crisis in mind? Absolutely — every company in the aviation sector is,” said Ronn Torossian, chairman of New York-based 5W Public Relations.

“Boeing paid the reputational price for hesitation and opacity. Airbus clearly wants to show … a willingness to say, ‘We could have done better.’ That resonates with regulators, customers, and the flying public.”

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